The 20 Most L.A. Albums Ever: 10-1

From the Sunset Strip to the beach to the streets of South Central, L.A. has for decades created one mythology after another in its music. Whether these images are embraced - or, say, shattered by South Bay punk rock - the dichotomy of a struggling inner city and bikini-clad rich kids in the hills gives L.A. a unique sound, a texture of noise that exists in different ways on the great records born in its neighborhoods.

Surveying that landscape and digging into the contributions of our musical pioneers, we've selected the 20 most quintessentially L.A. records. -Art Tavana

On GI, the voice of Germs singer Darby Crash sounds like mint jelly smeared over chunks of grey matter. Produced by Joan Jett, GI is the most primal cut of L.A. hardcore. It's Darby's self-sacrifice to make his city punker and more dangerous than New York, baptizing the gutter punks between Hollywood and Orange County. The scar tissue from the circular burn of GI remains deeply a part of L.A, where Darby's punk ghost (he committed suicide in 1980) remains stuck in purgatory. -Art Tavana

9. Red Hot Chili PepperBlood Sugar Sex Magik (1991)

Blood Sugar Sex Magik defined the The Red Hot Chili Peppers as L.A.'s bratty alt-rock prodigies. Recorded in Harry Houdini's former Laurel Canyon mansion, the work captures our city's grimy, sexy weirdness. "Under The Bridge," was the Chili Peppers' first top 10 song, and all of these years later it still sounds, to many, like what we're all about. -Mary Grace Cerni

8. Black FlagDamaged (1981)

When Damaged's opening track "Rise Above" first hits your eardrums, the hot, jumbled mess of post-Carter-era Los Angeles is shoved boot-first into your cranial cavity. Damaged is still a torrent that sandblasts away all the shine, all the tinsel, and anything else affixed by the image-conscious, sunbaked brains of the beach-to-Hollywood set. Even with the rage in Rollins' voice and the savagery of Ginn, Cadena, Dukowski and Robo's sonic commotion, the album leaves behind a wake of wit, and a wink of irony, lest you think that L.A. hardcore ever took itself too seriously. -Paul T. Bradley

Pet Sounds took the Beach Boys from the beaches of California into the tortured canals of Brian Wilson's brain - a record with a consistent stream of consciousness. Sure, "Surfin' USA" has more sunshine, but the ethereal guitar intro on "Wouldn't it Be Nice" captures the breezy California surfboard aesthetic better than anything, well, ever recorded. It's L.A. dipped into a vat of acid, and it connected with most everyone who heard it; to many people this is the sound of L.A., whether they've been here or not. -Art Tavana

Produced by Ray Manzarek of the Doors, X's debut Los Angeles is a seething portrayal of the glad-handing, sleazy side of L.A. It tells the L.A. punk story in melodic, blistering, and nauseating snapshots that deal with racism, classism, and gentrification. X's documentary-style songwriting became the foundation of gangsta rap's style in the '90s. On Los Angeles, they summoned anarchy as well as anyone else. -Art Tavana

4. 2pacAll Eyez on Me (1996)

All Eyez On Me was Tupac's first album for Death Row, after Suge Knight and Jimmy Iovine sprung him from jail. Tupac comes storming out of the gate, abandoning most traces of his once "conscious" persona. Lowriders, weed, tricks, danger, ambition, riches, and payback; it's two albums worth of thug life ambition on the West side. Though he didn't spend much of his existence in L.A., his portrayal of our city is more memorable than most others who did. Picturing him rolling is not hard to do, even 17 years after his death. -Artemis Thomas-Hansard

3. The DoorsThe Doors (1967)

LCD-tripping between UCLA and Venice Beach in the summer of 1965, Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek decided to start a band, man. The result became the first Doors album: an ode to the "Soul Kitchen" at Olivia's in Venice, a live Whiskey a Go Go performance turned into an 11-minute epic ("The End"), and the first Doors song about an L.A. Woman, "Twentieth Century Fox." It's their breakthrough, and, if you ask a lot of people who would know, a pioneering L.A. punk masterpiece. -Art Tavana

2. Dr. DreThe Chronic (1992)

The Chronic popularized and defined G-funk, brought gangsta rap to the pop charts, and gave Zig-Zag free promotion. It's a Los Angeles where the lucky ones light up, put the top back, and ride as the sun goes down. Dr. Dre's rhymes, and those of his protege Snoop Doggy Dogg, offer journalistic reports of South Central and Long Beach, with Hollywood blockbuster levels of hedonism. On The Chronic, Compton and Sunset Blvd. met for the first time. Everyone got stoned. -Max Bell

In the '80s seemingly every heartland wunderkind hot-footed it out to the City of Angels, hoping to be the next David Lee Roth. Most of them just ended up with dope habits, herpes and stories, but one of them was W. Axl Rose. Appetite For Destruction, perhaps the last great rock and roll record (fuck Nevermind) is an oral history, an epic about small-town dreams meeting big-city realities.

"Welcome to the Jungle" is the L.A. star chase experience; "It's So Easy" details what happens when punk kids from Indiana have A&R men fawning over their every move; "Nightrain" is a diary entry of debauch; "Paradise City" is as L.A. as the sun breaking through the clouds on a January afternoon. Then there were the women Axl and the boys encountered while making Appetite: The Rocket Queens, the Michelles, the crazy ones and the sweet ones Axl muses on throughout the entire second side. All in all, Appetite is as L.A. as albums get, and we're all lucky we lived to hear the tale. -Nicholas Pell

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